Canada’s Coup-Supporting Corporate Cowboy
Diplomacy
By Matthew Behrens
When
US Secretary of State John Kerry bloviated last fall about officially ending
the Monroe Doctrine (the U.S. belief that God grants only Americans the right
to interfere with the internal affairs of other western hemisphere countries),
one wonders if Stephen Harper and his foreign affairs pit bull John Baird
immediately took the concept on for themselves. Perhaps they also adopted a bit
of manifest destiny thrown in for good measure. How else – other than through
the lens of someone who truly feels anointed by the heavens – can one begin to understand
Harper’s messianic foreign policy, one in which he and John Baird play tag-team
John Waynes making the world safe for Canadian corporate profits?
While
it is true that Canada has always had a sense of manifest destiny – the notion
that a little bit of Canada goes a long way in “developing” nations, whether
that means invading Russia after World War 1, overthrowing the Aristide government
in Haiti, or maintaining a genocidal occupation of First Nations – it has not
always been trumpeted as loudly as in recent years. Indeed, one can almost hear
the alarums playing in their heads as the PM and his trusted sidekick globetrot
over to Ukraine, imagining themselves as Churchillian figures standing up
against the Russian bear as they support the junta ruling post-coup Ukraine.
Needless to say, Ukraine is a pearl awaiting exploitation, as global natural
gas producers and investment bankers salivate over this region where Chevron
hopes to frack $10 billion of shale oil out of the landscape and the IMF
imposes gut-wrenching austerity that will drain away social programs and
economic diversity in favour of privatization and evaporation of state funds
into the hands of the wealthy few.
The
Ukraine mess is also a boon for weapons manufacturers who, frightened at the
slight decline in potential orders as governments try to tighten their belts,
now have a new excuse to keep the taps flowing, one as welcome as when the U.S.
invited Saddam Hussein to invade Kuwait and then, playing bait and switch,
rallied the weapons corporations together with massive new funding that most
thought would have made for a great post-Cold War peace dividend. Harper’s dispatch
of 6 CF-18 fighters to the region (with nary a whisper of outrage from the
opposition in Ottawa) is also great PR for a government that will soon use
their overseas presence as an advertisement to entice us into supporting the
stealth fighter purchase for the purpose of NATO interoperability. For Lockheed
Martin stockholders, it’s Christmastime.
The
Ukraine debacle represents the latest in a pattern of Harper/Baird supporting coups
and ignoring human rights violations as a nasty but necessary part of doing
business. (Though let’s not blame the conservatives too much, for the liberals
have a long tradition of supporting gross human rights violations as well. We
all too easily forget the war criminality in which Lester Pearson immersed
himself over Southeast Asia. Who can forget the Trudeau government’s shamefully
immediate recognition of post-coup Chile’s General Pinochet, guaranteeing
Canadian mining interests the “stability” they desired to continue business as
usual?).
Harper’s psychological apocalypticism
That
Harper can boldly state the Crimea crisis represents the worst threat the world
has seen since the end of the cold war reflects what the brilliant U.S. social
critic and psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton identifies as “a psychological apocalypticism
in which all prior products of the human mind give way to a new collective
mind-set” that is “pure, perfect, and eternal.” In the pure and perfect minds
of Harper and Baird, there has been no invasion and slaughter of Iraqis
claiming over two million lives since 1991, nor the imposition from without of
PTSD on an entire nation of people in Afghanistan, drone strikes claiming
thousands of lives, genocide in Rwanda and Sudan, or any other horrors that
have often been the product of U.S., Canadian, and NATO policies and actions.
For Harper, this is his World War II moment, an opportunity in his own pure
mind to cement his footprint in history.
Nonetheless,
Harper and Baird’s foreign policy has been touted much of late in editorial
pages, picking up on Baird’s idea of a “principled” approach to the world. On
March 27, Canada’s foreign affairs minister pounded his podium and declared:
“Challenging and confronting those who threaten freedom, democracy, human
rights and the rule of law” is where he wants his representatives abroad to
“distinguish themselves.” Of course, such rhetoric is used equally easily by
the likes of Vladimir Putin and George W. Bush, and is emptier than a
California aquifer in the middle of that state’s record-breaking drought.
For
anyone willing to take even a cursory look at the Harper/Baird record, it is
clear that this duo is acting as the advance guard to sell the world Canadian
weapons that can be used by repressive regimes and private militias who are
defending Canadian mining and petroleum companies from the democratic
aspirations of peasants, labour organizers, and journalists who question why
their air, water, land, and rights must be despoiled in the interest of
Canada’s economic prosperity. Canadian trade officials are now openly embedded
into Canadian business organizations and trade associations, such as the
Canadian Association of Defence and Security Industries (CADSI), which claims
half of its $12 billion in annual revenues come from overseas sales http://www2.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/archives/story.html?id=7ac5a3a6-ed4a-4133-9db9-5535727cbafd. Ottawa has made no secret of its desire to grow its arms export
market, including to such rights violating countries as the U.S., Mexico,
Pakistan, Bahrain, Iraq, and Egypt. In fact, back before he became a convenient
whipping post, the Ukraine government of Viktor Yanukovich was the recipient of
over $80,000 in weapons, some of which may well have been used in the
repression of last winter’s protests.
Canada Supporting Coups
Canada’s
global mining industry similarly presents Canada with an opportunity to support
the coups and repressive regimes that host them. In Guatemala, for example,
where some five dozen unionists have been murdered in the past five years, favoured
trade status with the EU and US is under threat for that government’s failure
to investigate these murders. Canada has been silent no doubt because
conditions are perfect for record mining company profits
(http://www.miningwatch.ca/news/road-justice-speaking-tour-bring-attention-guatemala-mining-conflict-need-remedy-canada)
In the same neighbourhood, Canada
supported the 2009 coup in Honduras by opening up free trade talks, while Nobel
Laureate Jody Williams noted, “The Canadian embassy remains silent on the human
rights abuses committed by mining companies, while playing a prominent role in
facilitating high-level meetings for corporations.”
(http://www.canadians.org/fr/node/8298) John Ralston Saul writes that some
three dozen Honduran journalists have been killed since 2009 with impunity:
only two convictions have been registered in these crimes.
(http://www.ottawacitizen.com/business/Canada+should+press+Honduras+free+speech/9719393/story.html)
Ottawa
has treated post-coup Egypt with kid gloves as well, refusing to condemn the overthrow
of the democratically elected Morsi government, claiming in retrospect that
because Morsi tended toward the autocratic, there was no need to return him to
power (an argument one could perhaps use in the case of Stephen Harper as he
bulldozes through with omnibus legislation and his “Fair Elections” Act). Canada
continues regular relations with Egypt while that country holds Canadian
citizen and Al Jazeera reporter Mohamed Fahmy, and
pretends all is well as 529 individuals were sentenced to death last month following
an in absentia trial lasting less
than one hour. The Egyptian government,
meanwhile, has not been held to account for the murder of over 1,200 civilian
protesters and the mass jailing of over 16,000 people (http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/03/24/egypt-shocking-death-sentences-follow-sham-trial), and Canada has increased weapons sales to Egypt by 83% (http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/canada-exporting-arms-to-countries-with-suspicious-human-rights-records/article15817569/). Not to be worried about the ongoing repression, Canada
maintains at least 13 trade commissioners in its Egyptian embassy
(http://www.tradecommissioner.gc.ca/eng/find-trade-contacts-list.jsp?cids=304&search=+Submit+)
Just
to the west of Egypt lies the mess in Libya, created with the full cooperation
of the Harper government (and its NDP opposition, which had no trouble fully
supporting the illegal NATO bombing campaign that ousted the Gaddafi regime). There
are no headlines calling out for justice in Libya, where dozens have reportedly
been tortured to death, with the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
noting that “members of the armed brigades freely admitted, and even tried to
justify, the physical abuse of detainees.” http://www.refworld.org/docid/524fe6634.html These are the same
militias who worked hand-in-hand with Canada and NATO, but in the Harper
paradigm, it’s a new day in Libya, and the Canadian Trade Commissioner Service
declares: “Whether
you are looking to export, invest, attract investment, or develop innovation
and R&D partnerships in Libya our trade commissioners are available when
and where you need them.” The commission’s website does caution about travel
risks and terrorism, but not a word about torture. http://www.tradecommissioner.gc.ca/eng/office.jsp?oid=154
Meantime,
Canada and the United Arab Emirates AE have signed a nuclear cooperation
agreement even though the government’s own internal briefings shows Ottawa is
well aware of human rights abuses, noting “international human rights
organizations believe that national security has been used as a pretext by the
U.A.E. government to suppress dissent and repress activists asking for
democratic reforms.” http://www2.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/archives/story.html?id=1f0c4679-27b5-4e92-b514-8c804fa6fddb
Economic Diplomacy Rules the Day
Given Canada’s focus on “economic diplomacy”
with the world, it makes sense that the profits being made from exporting coal
to China (Canada has gone from shipping $13 million in 2007 to well over $1
billion now) cannot be tampered with by speaking out forcefully on behalf of
Canadians illegally jailed there, such as Burlington’s Huseyin Celil, a Uighur
who continues to suffer in extreme isolation behind bars while Harper welcomes
a China Investment Corporation office in Toronto.
Similarly, for all the self-serving
rhetoric about liberating women in Afghanistan as an excuse for the illegal
occupation of that country, Canada has been fairly tight-lipped about
repression of women in Saudi Arabia, to which $10 billion in light armoured
vehicles (which were used to help suppress Arab spring demonstrators in
neighbouring Bahrain) are being sent from London, Ontario.
While President Obama tries to thaw
out relations with Iran, Ottawa goes harder on Tehran, even declaring that
country a state sponsor of terrorism. Perhaps Canada’s role as a petro state
has something to do with the stance, for as the Financial Post baldly stated last September 27, a warming up of
relations with Iran means Iranian oil could flood the world market, driving
down the price of Canadian petroleum products. And while Syria is now on the
backburner (with Canada conceding fewer than ten Syrian refuges have actually
made it to Canada), Canada waited until after the Olympics to drive home the
point that Russia has continued to support the Assad regime. While Harper was
making that point one fine day in September, 2013, the very same day two trade ministers were in Moscow to bolster
economic ties with Canada as a “top of mind” partner. Russia was called a
priority market, and two-way trade grew exponentially from $179 million in 1999
to over 2.65 billion in 2012. The “evil” Putin was in power most of that time,
and invaded other territories (South Ossetia in 2008, Chechnya in the 1990s),
but with little sense of outrage from the so-called west.
While
space does not permit a comprehensive overview of Canadian foreign policy here,
the trends are clear. The idea that Canada will be, in the words of Mr. Baird,
pressing for human rights, the rule of law, and freedom in its dealings with
the world is so Orwellian as to debase the oft-used term. It’s not so much a
double standard as it is a single standard, the one that emerges from the state
of exceptionalism with which the Canadian government views itself on the world
stage. In this pure and perfect world, there is no such thing as contradiction
or irony, complicity with torture and human rights abuses, legacies of
colonialism and economic strangulation. No, there is only the truth of economic
prosperity as tweeted and facebooked by government ministers and regurgitated
by a pliant press.
Canadian Weapons Repress Women
In
this cynical game, the problems of the world – torture, refugee crises,
poverty, environmental destruction – are an annoying but easily dismissed
backdrop best reflected in the rah-rah statement of Jayson Myers, president of
Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters. While Human Rights Watch found that “In
Saudi Arabia, 2013 was another bad year for human rights, marred by executions
and repression of women and activists,” Myers gushed (http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/canadian-firm-wins-arms-deal-for-saudi-arabia-but-concerns-raised-about-human-rights/article16897175/)
upon the recent news that the Saudi dictatorship would be receiving billions in
Canadian weapons: “This is an Olympic win for Canada and for Canadian
manufacturers. It shows how great people in truly innovative companies like
General Dynamic Land Systems Canada can compete internationally and bring home
the gold. Like all victories, it’s been the result of a team effort in which the
government has played a crucial role. All Canadians should be proud of this
record achievement.”
If that news doesn’t have you
running the maple leaf up your flagpole, nothing will.
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